On 4 October 2011, in an article in
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Purposes of the project
As with almost any major initiative in international politics and economics, Putin’s proposal evidently is to serve several distinct but mutually reinforcing purposes. The first pertains to domestic politics. On 24 September 2011, at a congress of Putin’s United Russia party, the pretence of ‘tandem democracy’ was abandoned: Putin announced that he would run again in the 4 March 2012 presidential elections and that, if victorious, Medvedev would return to the premiership – an arrangement, as the then still premier unashamedly admitted, that had been made in 2007 since the question as to who should be head of state was simply one of ‘political expediency’. Thus, the launching of the Eurasian Union project little more than one week later can be taken as an election campaign manifesto. A second major purpose is connected with Russia’s competitive relationship with the EU on post-Soviet space. The timing may be accidental yet Putin’s ‘new integration project for Eurasia’ was launched less than a week after the summit conference of the heads of state and government of the EU and the Eastern Partnership countries (minus a high-level representation from Belarus) in Warsaw. In any case, the project fits seamlessly into the Kremlin’s policy of counteracting the attractiveness and influence of the EU and Russia’s attempts at preserving what it regards as its sphere of influence in the ‘common neighborhood’ in Europe. A third purpose can be considered to be the counterpart to the European dimension of the project, that is, an attempt to secure a Russian sphere of influence in Central Asia and to counteract and limit the economic dominance that is slipping away from Moscow as the Chinese presence in the countries of this region is growing and the Central Asian countries increase their trade with China, especially in the energy sphere. This purpose is indicated, among others, by Putin’s above-mentioned explicit reference to Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan as the next possible members of the Customs Union and the SES. As far back as 1994, Nazarbayev had proposed a ‘Eurasian Union’ which would have included the three Slavic states of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus, Moldova and Georgia, and the five post-Soviet Central Asian states minus Tajikistan (then in the midst of a civil war). The idea was rejected by Uzbekistan’s president Islam Karimov, however, and was never implemented despite Nazarbayev’s repeated tabling of the proposal at various CIS summits. 8 The second of the three possible purposes must be regarded as the most important of the three. This interpretation is justified by the fact that without Ukraine and definite refusals by Moldova and Georgia, as well as the disinterest of Armenia and Azerbaijan, the Eurasian Union could more likely be called a Central Asian Union with a Belarusian appendix. Indeed, given the successful utilization of Belarus’s international isolation and its growing dependency on Russia and the pressures which the Kremlin has exerted on president Viktor Yanukovych ever since his assumption of office in February 2010 to enter into the trilateral Customs Union and participate in the SES, it is obvious that, in Putin’s calculations, Ukraine is the linchpin of the Eurasian Union project. For this reason, in accordance with the purposes of the present publication series, the focus will be limited to the consideration of the European dimension of the project. This concerns in particular Russia’s policies towards Belarus and Ukraine. Download 1.29 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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